xt759z90cc74 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt759z90cc74/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1978-02-22 Earlier Titles: Idea of University of Kentucky, The State College Cadet newspapers  English   Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel  The Kentucky Kernel, February 22, 1978 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 22, 1978 1978 1978-02-22 2020 true xt759z90cc74 section xt759z90cc74 < KEN?“ of

Volume LXIX’ Number “M an independent student newspaper

University of Kentucky
Wednesday, February 22,1977

Close, but non-cigar

David 0' Neil

Cheerleader Karen (‘rum indulges in a bit of wishful thinking during
the UK-Alabama game. Unfortunately, she was one finger short as
UK placed second in the AP basketball poll.

Instructor sues UK

Suit seeks release of recommendation letters

By DEBBIE McDANIEL
Kernel Staff Writer

UK faculty member Anne Loye

has filed suit against UK following
notification that her 1978-79 contract
will not be renewed.
‘ The suit was filed in Fayette
Circuit Court on Feb. 17, seeking an
injunction ordering the release of
letters of recommendations
regarding her contract renewal.

The decision to terminate Loye’s
contract came after her evaluation
by fellow tenured faculty members
who submitted letters of recom-
mendation to College of Education
Dean George Denemark.

Ina Dec. 14, 1977 letter, Denemark
notified Loye, a teacher in the
Department of Health, Physical
Education and Recreation, that,
“after a careful review of the letters
submitted by the tenured members
of your department," her contract
would be terminated as of June 30,
1978.

Named as defendants in the
complaint are the Board of Trustees,
Denemark, Business Affairs Vice
President Jack Blanton, Depart-
ment of Health Chairman H. Leon
Garrett and Academic Affairs Vice-
President Lewis Cochran.

Loye refused to give a statement
and referred reporters to her at-
torney, Arthur Brooks.

“Basically, what we‘re trying to
do is see the records,” said Brooks.
“We‘re trying to see the letters
written by tenured faculty mem-
bers. I think she has a right to see
her own records."

Garrett, Denemark and Cochran
could not be reached for comment on
the case.

UK Legal Counsel John Darsie
outlined the basic procedure of re-
employment of untenured faculty
members, such as Loye. “When the
Dean is making a decision on
whether to renew the contract, the
department chairman asks each
tenured faculty member to write a
letter of evaluation concerning that
faculty member‘s qualifications.
Those letters are collected by the
chairman and forwarded by him,
with his recommendation, to the
Dean who makes the decision.

Loye's complaint asks the court to
void Denemark’s decision to ter-
minate her contract, and contends
that she has a right to inspect the
letters of recommendation and use
them in her departmental appeal.
The complaint also asks the court to
issue a temporary injunction
directing the defendants to allow
inspection and reproduction of the
letters, in pursuance to the Open
Records Law.

According to Brooks, Loye is also
entitled to the following under the
Open Records Law: payment of $25
for each day that she was denied the
right to inspect and copy the letters,
and recovery of court costs from the
defendants—including an attorney’s
fee for her attorney.

Brooks said Leye needs the
documents to appeal the decision,
but was denied access to the letters,
because of a University policy which
states that letters of recom-
mendations are private records and
not available for release to UK
employees.

However, because Loye's letters
affect her employment, Brooks said,
“I think she has a right to know.”

Darsie said, “It is the general

practice and usage in the academic
world that faculty members are
assured that the University will, to
the extent possible, preserve the
confidence of those letters of
evaluation. It is our position that
those letters of evaluation are
exempt from disclosure under the
Open Records Law because they are
preliminarry recommendations.
That is, the Open Records Law says
documents of public agencies are
public with certain exceptions—and
one of these is preliminary
recommendations.

“We believe those faculty letters
fall within that exception because
those faculty members who are
writing those letters aren‘t making
that decision (whether to renew a
contract or noti,” said Darsie. The
final decision comes from the Dean.

Darsie added that although the
University considers the recom-
mendations to be exempt from the
law, “when somebody like Loye
wants to see the letters, we contact
the faculty members who wrote the
letters and ask them if they'll
consent to release them.“

A total of ten letters of recom—
mendation were involved, and only
three people gave their consent to
allow Loye to see them. Those three
letters were turned over to her,
according to Darsie and Blanton.

Blanton said, “My only in-
volvement is as the official records
custodian for the University,“ he
said. “Loye is seeking to gain access
to the recommendations off her
peers through the use of an in-
junction. The University says it can
shelter those under the law, and the
courts will have to decide."

Lexington. Kentucky

Loye alleges in the formal cont
plaint that the true motivation for
her contract termination was to
“punish and penalize tht‘rl for
exercising her right of free ex-
pression and speech." The com—
plaint also states the “decision not to
rc-employ . . . (Loye) was to
discriminate against her because
she is a female.”

Darsie said, “At this point I don‘t
know what free speech she's talking
about. With regard to the sex
discrimination charge I am in—
formed that the office for Minority
Affairs has investigated that charge
and the office concluded that sex
discrimination was not present.”

Brooks said he could not comment
on what was meant by the free.
speech clause and added, ”1 par—
posely inade it rather broad at this
point."

The defendants received copies of
the complaint yesterday, and have
20 days to file an answer. The motion
for temporary injunction will be
heard at 9:30 am. Friday in the
Fayette Circuit Courtroom, in the
County Courthouse.

If Loye gains access to the letters
and wins her appeal of the depart-
ment decision, Darsie said the court
could force the university to rchire
her.

“If it were proven that the
t'niversity's actions were based on
constitutionally impermissable
grounds,“ said Darsie, “state action
could grant appropriate relief." He
added that although other UK
employees have filed suits similiar
to Loye's, no one has ever won
against l'K.

Recruiting brings blacks to Law School

By RICHARD MCDONALD
Copy Editor

(This is the second in a two—part
series examining the minority ad-
mission policies of UK‘s colleges of
Law and Medicine. Today‘s article
concerns the College of Law.)

There are 17 blacks among the
College of Law‘s 476 students. Five
of the blacks are first year students.

According to Paul VanBooven,
assistant dwn of the college. the
faculty and administration think “it
is important to have black lawyers
in the mainstream of society."

For this reason, VanBooven said,
the college has a black recruiting
program. Its program, however,
does not match that of the medical
college.

Unlike the medical school. the law
school does not try to contact in-
dividual prospects or high school
students. Instead, it concentrates on
trying to sell its programs to groups
of blacks.

VanBooven said representatives
of the school try to make their first
contacts with interested minority
students in their sophomore or
junior years. The college focuses its
efforts on state schools and black
colleges clustered around Atlanta.

VanBoovai said the law school
bases its admission decision on a
process called “full-file review."
Under this process, applicants,
black or white, can submit materials
other than transcripts and Law
School Admission Test scores.
VanBooven said many students
include letters of recommendation,
autobiographies or explanations of
unusual grade patterns.

The college first instituted this
policy in the fall of 1976. Previously,
admission was based solely on GPA
and LSAT scores. Vaanven said
the policy was changed because
faculty members thought it was
overly restrictive and tended to
eliminate black applicants.

VanBooven said the disparity
between the academic standards for
black and white applicants is a
problem for law schools nationwide.

Scores for the LSAT were com-
piled nationwide for the first time in
1976. The figures show that while 89
percent of the white applicants in
that year made LSAT scores of 450
or better, only 33 percent of the
blacks met or exceeded 450.

Thirtysevm percent of the white
applicants made scores above 600,
but only 142 of the 4,300 black ap-
plicants exceeded 600.

VaiiBooven said despite wide

College of Law‘s faculty and ads
ministratcrs don't feel the LSAT is
culturally biased. “We think it‘s an
accurate measure of the skills
needed for law school," he said.
Many of the faculty members,
according to VanBooven, think this
large difference exists because of
the emphasis placed on writing
skills, both on the test and in law
school. To compensate for what they
see as a difference in writing skills,

the college offers a special course
for black and Appalachian students
who have deficient writing skills.

VanBooveri said about half a dozen
students are now enrolled in the
special class. In addition, these
students carry a reduced course
load.

A law school administrator, who
asked not to be named, said the
college has the special minority
admission policy because,‘ we think

 

l

1

white students need to be exposed
not only to the viewpoints but to the
experiences of black students in the
classroom.“

Even with its admission policy,
the College of Law accepts more
black students than actually
enrolled. L: st year the college ac-
cepted 10 black applicants. Only five
of them enrolled.

Unlike medical colleges how,ever
\ anBoov en said this is not caused by

competition among schools for black
students. “This is the iioniial pat-
tern among all schools. Students
normally apply to, and are accepted
by, a number of schools."

The (twision in the Alan Bakke
case before the Supreme Court, may
have some effect on the College of
Law's minority admissions policy;
despite the fact that it does not use
quotas in its selection process.

VanBooven said he thinks the
Supreme ( ‘ouit will declare the use
of quotas in the admissions process
unconstitutional How,evo‘ he said
he thinks the court will allow use of
non-objective standards in the
selection process.

“Whatever they do." he said,
liqie the court writes a clear opinion
saying what is or is not per-
missible."

The Association of American Law
Schools, said \‘anBooven, estimated
that one percent of the spaces in law
schools will go to minority students
if the Supreme Court rules that
objective standards must be used in
admissions.

The law school administrator who
asked not to be identified, said. “if
the court calls for admissions based
on grades and lSA'l‘ scores only, we
are going to have a lot of lily-white

differences in group scores,

 

the

 

 

 

I I
inside
To (irat Caudill. basketball was more than a game. it was life. itself. His
tale is the subject of the week for Charles Main on page 2.

state

TIII-I STATE lll'MAN Ill-ZSOl'RCHS DEPARTMENT is providing family
planning to only about a third of Kentuckians who need such services, a state
official said yesterday.

Dr Patricia Nicol. director of Maternal and Child Health Services for the
department. said an estimated 200.000 Kentuckians need subsidized family
planning services. and 34 percent are being served She told the joint Ap-
propriations and Revenue Committee that the department hopes to increase
that to 37 percent over the next two years.

Family planning services include a complete physical examination for
each woman. counseling on the methods of contraception and “everything
short of abortion," Nicol said

About a third of the clients. or about 23,000 persons, served by the state
family planning services are under 19 Nicol said about 65 percent of persons
served by the program stay with it

I
nation
ll.\.\ll|.TO\ JORDAN MAY BF. HAMPERED In carrying out his duties as
Prestdait Carter‘s chief aide as a result of allegations that he was in a

law schools."

 

Rum woodman

 

today

barroom altercation with a young woman, Carter‘s chief spokesman said
yesterday.

White House Press Secretary Jody Powell faced lengthy questioning at the
daily White House news briefing about the alleged incident. The Washington
Post reported Sunday that Jordan, rebuffed in his attempt to strike up a
conversation in a Washington singles bar, spat his drink down the front of
her blouse.

Jordan denied the allegation. On Monday the White House released 33
pages of statements about the allegations, including the comments of a
bartender who said he had not seen such an incident take place.

Asked about a rumor that at White House request the FBI was in-
vestigating, Powell said: “That's not true and it's just an example of the
sleazy crap that is coming out of this.“

COAL INDUSTRY AND l'NlTl-ID MINI-2 WORKERS bargainers resumed
negotiations yesterday in an attempt to end the 7Bday coal strike before the
government imposes a settlement;

Labor Secretary Ray Marshall shuttled between meetings of the
Bituminous Coal Operators Association and the union to work out a corn-
promise agreement.

An administration official aid 2 proposed settlement reached by the union

and an independent coal operator on Monthy “does figure in a major way" in

the new talks.

As govern ment pressure mounted for an end to the lengthy strike, officials
of the Bituminous Coal Operators Association. the 130member employers
group. announced they were agreeable to new talks. However. they
criticized aspects of the independent settlement.

.\ 'l‘lllttIl-I-(‘Ol'NT FEDERAL INlllCTMI-INT accusing the brother of
Panamanian leader (ien. Omar Torrijos of smuggling heroin into the inner!
States in 1971 was unsealed yesterday by a federal judge.

The indictment against Moises Torrijos was unsealed by l‘ S District
Judge Jack B. Weinstein,

In Washington yesterday. the Senate was told by its intelligence corn-
mtttee that Gen. Torrijos knew officials of his government were engaged in
drug trafficking “and did not take sufficient action" to stop his brother from
becoming involved. Committee members added that there is “no conclusive
evidence" that the Panamanian leader himself was involved

world

Sl'NNY AND COLD TODAY with highs in the low 30's Becoming cloudy
tonight with a chance of light snow, endng during the day tomorrow .Vo
significant accumulation expected Continued cold tonight with a low in the
uppa teens. High tomorrow in the low 30s

tompiled from Associated Press dispatches.

 

 

 

  
  
   
  
  
  
  
   
 
  
  
  
   
 
  
   
  
   
  
   
 
   
  
  
 
 
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
  
   
    
   
  
    
    
   
  
  
    
   
   
  
   
  
   
    
  
    
  
   
   
   
   
  
 
 
   
   
  
           
   
   
       
      
  
  
    
  
 
    
   
  
     

 
 
   
 
  

 

 

 

  

 

 

Kémdfiel

editorials 8: comments

Steve Itallinger llavid llibbilts Gregg Holt
Editor in Chief SP0"! Editor Ric It Id
llielt (labriel Jim McNair
Managing Editor Hub Stauble me hit“. I“
Assistant Sports Editor Co 3"“th
'l‘liiunast'lark P)’ l on
Assistant Managing Editor Wuller'l‘unls
. ”er“ Main Arts E Entertainment Editor Pagii‘o-Ne“
l-Tditoriat Editor 0 anager
Nell Fields
Jennifer (lal'r Assistant Arts & JeanneWehncs
smll""‘~"' Entertainment Editor

 

Photo Supervisor

 

Cure for intramural blues

Intramural basketbail has become more
popular than Tokyo subways at rush hour, and

something needs to be done.

Intramural play was supposed to give more
people a chance to play, in an organized fashion,
but now it’s hard for a team to get one game a
week. The courts are tied up with league play
through March to serve the record number of

teams.

With outdoor courts unavailable became of
bad weather, its nearly impossible to play pickup
games anymore, so crowded are the Seaton

Center and the Alumni Gym.

Recreation officials say there’s not enough
money to keep indoor facilities open longer.
School policy also frowns on students playing

basketball at 4 a.m.
But if

Shooting baskets . . .

The ball springs back to him
again, its leather surface tight and
cool beneath his fingertips —
merging there with the rest of his
hand. In the one motion he is off his
feet again, the muscles in his legs
lifting him effortlessly, evenly, his
body squared with the goal, the
arms in front and above him,
releasing the ball at his zenith,
driving it home in a swift, sure arc.
No metal again, just the strings
leaping suddenly in response to their
violation— leaping, then falling
slack just as suddenly. The ball
springs back again; two steps to the
right allow him to meet it, absorb it,
begin again . . .

Grat couldn‘t remember a time
when he wanted to do anything but
play basketball. He liked to watch
basketball, listen to basketball, talk
about basketball, but only when he
couldn‘t play it.

Something about the kids he
knew .. or at least knew of — in his

 

intramural basketball

might work:

commodate more people or was less popular,
participation could increase. These changes

0 Make all games half-court, with 15-man
squads. This would create exciting new plays,
like the “flying-wedge drive” and the real
“stack” offense.

'Or, equip referees with loaded pistols and
cattle prods for punishment of fouls. This will
drive out the bullies, toughs and frustrated ex-
jocks who infest the leagues.

- As a last resort, replace the basketball with a

grapefruit. Although a grapefruit is easier to
shoot, it is significantly more difficult to dribble.
Interest in intramural basketball will decline,

the courts will be open and everyone could play

could ac-

hometown: they didn't like different
people. Grat was different. He was
small not slight or skinny, for he
was thick of build, and rather
strong ~ and not too good looking.

Some people you could look at in a
certain light or at a flattering angle
and see signs of attractiveness, but
not (Irat. He just wasn‘t good
looking; nor was anyone in his

 

 

 

family. Every member of Grat
(‘audill‘s family had his face—
aquiline, chinless, with large brow
and lips. They just weren't good-
looking folks.

Nobody blamed Grat for being
homely; they knew it was a family
thing, but they avoided him
nonetheless. The forced vanity that

   

whenever he wants.

accompanied constant peer-
comparison seemed to say “stay
away, he might make you ugly too."
Nobody wanted to be ugly.

Grat seemed to be conscious of his
homeliness at a very early age. He
kept to himself, mostly, and just
played basketball. Most every kid in
the county had a goal nailed up in the
yard or on the garage, and Grat’s
father had put one up just as soon as
(Irat was old enough to learn to
dribble.

Be an athlete, his father would
say: run, play, grow strong. Don't
waste time lying aroundinside when
you can be out playing ball.

Somehow. Grat thought, he must
make up for his differentness; atone
for his homeliness by being best at
something — at basketball.
Everyone played basketball, and
everyone respected someone who
could play it better than themselves.
If he couldn’t actually be liked, Grat
wanted at least to be respected.

So he played basketball. Day in,
iJHi

' ~Barney cmd.
courtesy ot the Louisville Courier-Journal

 

 

  

  

we"! WE ??w mag
62%wa warm

 
 
  

 

 

day out, he played basketball
wheneva‘ he could. He spent most of
his time at home in the driveway,
jumping and shooting and jumping
again, sometimes just bouncing the
ball off the backboard.

Grat grew up with his basketball.
It was his silent friend, his listening
friend on deserted Sunday
playgrounds and in his driveway on
weekdays after school. 0n those
Saturdays just after the rain when
the wet asphalt left his hands black
the basketball was always with him,
always listening, always arcing
away and rolling back or bouncing
back, always there beneath his
confident, knowing touch.

He ran imaginary drills with
himself, played imaginary cham-
pionship games which always came
down to a last, desperate jump shot
from beyond the garbage cans.
(‘ounting off the last seconds aloud
he would dribble to his spot, fake the
cans as if they were defenders, leap
above them and fire his most perfect
jump shot, shouting a'lWays
“one . . . zero!" as the ball rain-
bowed to the hoop.

Five, to, 15 times a day he would
fire that last desperate shot over the
garbage cans, calling them, or
himself, variously, Havlicek,
Robertson. . . West.

West most of all.

When he was II he had found a
.lerry West biography in the public
library; in one summer he checked
it out 5 times, reading it through four
or five times each time.

Jerry West played basketball by
himself, too. In his backyard, the
book said, in Cabin Creek, W. Va.

Jerry West had played alone just
as Grat did, shooting and sh00ting
and shooting long into the night,
until sometimes he was shooting at
the goal by instinct, it having got too
dark for him to see.

When he was quite young, Grat
wanted to be Jerry West; dreamed
of going to live in West Virginia, in
(‘abin Creek. Cabin Creek, he
thought, must be a magical place: a
magical place where basketball was
better than anywhere else.

As he grew older, and could read
the sports pages and follow the box
scores and NBA standings with

some knowledge, he just wanted to
be like .lerry West. And Cabin
Creek, a little mark on the map just
above Charleston, was just a place
he wanted to go. But basketball was
always magical: always would be.

He tried out for the basketball
team at his high school when he was
H, a ninth-grader. He made the
junior varsity with ease, and he and
another ninth-grader even got to
dress and practice with the varsity.
School became just that for him soon
enough: the varsity.

llis gradcs were C's. He put just
enough time into his schoolwork to
get just that: average grades. While
other kids were home after school
studying the American revolution
and frog dissection and basic
Spanish, he was home after school
shooting baskets.

llis social life never changed:

While other boys were down at the
Dairy Queen or the Burger Broil on
Saturday nights listening to the juke
boxes or feeling sweatered, budding
breasts in the corners of the parking
lots, (irat was home feeling his
basketball, shooting baskets.

When he was 15 and a tenth-
gradtr, he started for the varsity, he
realized half of a dream he had had
all his life. Those kids he had always
watched and listened to in school
were suddenly watching him. He
was shooting baskets just like
always, but now he was shooting
baskets there before them. and they
were cheering for him.

Shooting baskets became
something more to him now, became
a trigger; he loved shooting baskets
even more when they triggered all
that yelling; when they were a
command for those other kids who
nevo‘ spoke to him unless they
needed a pencil or a sheet of
notebook paper or the salt or the
answer to number four; when they
were a command for those kids to
stand and cheer him . . . to say
“well done. you are one of us . . . we
respect you.“

And though only some began to
treat him differently, and only some
began to try and engage him in

’Grat had grown up with it’

conversation, and only some began
to invite him to parties (to invite him
to parties! ), they all began to regard
him differently.

Eyes that for so many years had
looked through him, had failed to
regard or even acknowledge him,
now measured him fully, carefully,
respectfully. Kids respected you
when you could play basketball.

For three years more Grat played
basketball for those other kids,
manipulated their emotions with his
jump~shots, looked through them as
if they weren‘t there, declined their
invitations. Grat did not want to be
friends with them now, did not need
them . . . did not need anything but
basketball.

(lrat never thought he’d have to do
anything but play basketball, never
wanted to do anything else. He didn't
have time for jobs during school
days: basketball took up most of his
time. Then ajn, he really didn’t
heed arty 'n'idney: ‘ft co’stvab'sOIutely
nothingtoplay basketballv-

Grat hadn‘t thought about
graduation. Grat hadn‘t counted on
getting passed over by college
recruiters. Grat didn't ever think
that being only five feet eight inches
would keep him from playing
basketball somewhere.

For (trat. those realities were
hard to cope with. Even harder to
cope with was a university whose
studmt body was four times the
p0pulation of his home town, whose
studmt body was 40 times the
student body of his high school.

Hardest of all to cope with was not
playing basketball in front of pe0ple,
not being able to jump, pop and
command those screams
. . . hardest of all to cope with was ‘
being alone again.

At age lit. a sophomore in college,
he is alone again . . . with his
basketball. ()n deserted Sunday
playgrounds and on Saturdays just
after the rain, the wet asphalt tur-
ning his hands black . . .

t'harles Main is the Kernel Editorial
I'Iilitor. Ilis column appears every
\\ eilnestla _\'.

 

Kddfiel

The Kentucky Kernel, Ill Journalism
Budding, Unrversrly of Kentucky, Lex

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l‘._

ri., Feb. 24

ii p.m.
Memorial Hall Tickets $4.00

on sale Rm. 203 Student Center

Sponsored by: S.C.B. and made possible in

part by a grant from Southern Arts Federation 8.
National Endowment for the Arts.

 

 

  

 

 

  

    

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Full of contradictions

Good beyond his hype,
Costello sells out in Cincy

By KEITH HOLLAND
Kernel Reporter

From his fey mannerisms
to his clearly arrogant
stances, Elvis Costello is full
of contradictions.

 

review

 

With all his mania intact,
he gave two sold-out per-
formances Monday at
Bogart‘s in Cincinnati that
will not likely to be forgotten.

Dressed in an old, brown
suit and tie, Costello jumped
from song to song without
parse, while the sweat from
his face and hands dripped on
his green Fender guitar.

From the onset, it was clear
he was not going to play"
music from his only album. A
total of nine new songs were
played in the show.

The new songs had a
greater urgency than the
others and “Radio, Radio”
was a highlight. His band
played with explosive st0ps
while Costello screamed
about how radio has become
such a disgrace.

“Stranger in the House," a
tale about being replaced by a
look-alike lover, was done
with more conviction than
any number all night. Many
of the old songs sounded
considerably better than on
record.

With the National Front
placing third in a
parliamentary by-election in
Britain last year, the song
“Less than Zero” is becoming
more powerful.

The song is a chilling attack

_ , ,‘I'h'eatre‘thds
trybuts today“ ' "

Auditions will be held today
for the UK Theatre‘s Open
Space production of Ken-
nedy‘s Children, a play
concerned with the youth who
grew up in the 60's.

Tryouts will be held today
in the Music Lounge of the
Fine Arts Building from 345
pm. All students are invited
to audition.

The play will be directed by
Mary Beth K0pesky, theatre
graduate student.

 
  
        

is the number to cab for Infwmation
about the best read bulletin board on
canvas. the Kernel classified section.
The deadline for clasdfleds ls noon. one
day prior to publication.

for sale__

RITZY OLD clothes 01-010 evenings. 5-9.
It'nock. 031 E. Main. TFTI

 

1975 MONTE CARLO Landau. new tires.
T-Top. make offer. After 5:30. 293-0230.
DastM-«i’l. 14m

1000 FAIRLANE sou—es.ooo miles First
950 or trade for guns. 272-7740. III-‘23

SELMER SIONET 100. Wood Clarinet
med 1 year. excellent condition. 259-1910.
21m

'rwo SMALLER Advent loudspeakers.
hunt: tape deck. Call mm for price.
21m

NEW MILDA 3120 receiver. ‘hro Marantz
46 speakers. Must sell immediately M6334
21PM

“CONDITIONED Televlslm sets. Black
lad white andcolot. 850 to 8250. Call muss
tl' Til-1410. 21F14

 

YASIIICA. TL-Electro. F-IJ. 50mm. used
mce. 8150 S.L. camera 233-3135. 21m

 

AIC REGISTERED Collie pups. ti mos
dd. trl-cdored male meson. 21m

 

YAMAHA F6100 Acmtic six string guitar
with case perfect condition not 253-2111.
21“.:

 

VW-IUS 1070 In very good condition Tel.
50-20%! until Spm. 21m

 

 

I!“ SPITPIRE. Good body. not running.
I-toflermm.call afternoons. 21m

 

SALE: ms Plat III Sedan. less than half
lnok value a outsider trade tit-I71. mm

II VI Squareback. good condition 0350
all mean. fliers pm. 11”

 

TWO NEW Utah l-way speakers. Ust M
ncnfioe: 3100. 204-773. 21014

GUITAR. m Yamaha. 12-strtru with
mse.0150afta¢pan.m1m. m

 

FINAL "El-reductions of Inespemlve
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ms VALIANT Dealer. 5mm miles. good
umdltim. call mam. 22F“

 

DIII selectiul available rail Mia 57-1335.
m
STEREO I watt receiver. turntable; 1
unmwsnsmums. m

 

on the racist, neo-facist
Party. The most intense
moment of the concert came
with the pervase “Watching
the Detectives.” The band
created a tensive wall of
sound while Costello ex-
pressed the chaos in every
movement that he made. It
proved how flat his per-
formance on Saturday Night
Live really was and how
spellbinding he can actually
be in concert.

Beyond all of the excessive

hype and posturings the iact
remains that the songs
themselves are un-
forgettable. (‘ostello may
create an aura of decadence.
but the music is his main
conccm.

t11vis(‘ostcllo knows how to
hit you exactly where it
counts, and his live show and
new songs give every in-
dication that he has no in-
tention of letting up, not even
long enough to catch his
breath.

Dance to benefit network

Gamma Phi Beta sorority
and Farmhouse fraternity
will sponsor a Wildcat
Basketball Dance on the
cvming following the final
home game of the season
against Nevada-Las Vegas,
March 4.

Proceeds from the dance,

featuring the band
Apocrypha, will benefit the
Ephraim McDowell (Tom
munity (‘ancer Network.

The dance willbc held in
the Student Center beginning

at 8:30 pm. Tickets are $1.50 .

and are available at the door

’Quartet’ tickets go on sale

Tickets for the upcoming
UK Theatre production of
Appalachian Quartet are
available beginning today at
the theatre ticket office in the
Fine Arts Building.

The ticket office will be

Open from noon to 4:30 on
weekdays until March 1, then
from noon to curtain time on
the days of performance.
For reservations for the
remaining three per-
formances, call 258-2680.

 

Date:
Time:
. Place:

 

258-4

SUMMER JOBS

CEDAR POINT AMUSEMENT PARK,
Sandusky, Ohio will hold on-campus
interviews for summer employment:

Monday, February 27
8:45 AM. to 5:00 PM.

Student Employment Office
Patterson Office Tower

Over 3,200 positions available for a wide variety
of tabs. Dormitory or apartment style housing
available. Contact Student Employment Office.
Patterson Office Tower, for information and
appointment. Spend a summer in one of the
finest resort areas of the North.

ClDllllPOllll'l‘

Illl...

 

 

46

The Kernel classified office is located in
room 110M the Journalism Building. on
CIIIIIII. All ads must be paid In ad-
vance.

 

 

BLUETICR Coonhound six months. hunt-
hs stock had shots :25. Call 270-9136. 22F23

 

1060 CHEVY Biscayne standard shift
73. miles runs well 3250 254-5407 after